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Newspaper Archive of
Golden Valley News
Beach, North Dakota
March 3, 1932     Golden Valley News
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March 3, 1932
 
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PA~! TWO " "• ~ ~ BEAOH, N. D., ADVANCE BEACH ADVANCE l held this c~alntry in its grasp for a rmmber of years? Is he responsibleI , .... ~_~ __ =_..-,. ~M __ i for the sudden collapse of these speculative 0rices and of the great losses ' - ~w ~[N~ ~.~~ ~IT ~ which followed? Is he responsible for the present non-employment of i,£ ............................. ] millions of our people since this gas bag of speculation was punotured. ~u~r ~gtlanal gnu ~ca~ ~m~orlal Assomauons ] ~JB][[IDD AT BEACH. NORqP~Ir DAKOTA EVERY THURSDAY [ AS reasonable, fair minded men we must answer every one of these k~~ ~t -oatogflce t Beach "'orth Dakot~ "" - "9~" a secon~/~ questions in the negative. But, you may ask: What has ,he done or at- p a class' ~ matter~ on ~ay a. i v~, s tempted l to do to amehorate these conditmns. As we look over his ef- Btl~ti0ns in North Dakota. South Dakota, Montana and Minnesota,~| forts are we not compelled to say that he has done and is doing every- $2.00. To all other states. $2.50 ..... thing lmmanly ,possible to grade us out of thin swamp of depressmn? In A~Mre~ all communications to ~.h:ko?2ACH ADVANCE, Beach, North the face of these multiplied calamitous conditions, how has the Presi- dent comported himself? O]F]F~CL~L ~rl~ AND COUNTY NEWSPAPER His first act on becoming President of the United States was an cf- ....... fort to meet our agricultural depression. He advised with the Agricul- "GIVE TI-1E DEVIL HIS D'UTE" I ural Societies of the United States as to what should be done. It was a ,.--,--o- We have Just received a letter from ex-Senator P. J. MeCumbcr that ahouM be of interest to our readers, whether or no~ they agree with the former U. S. Senator from .this state, as it presents some matters of po- litical tu~l*est that greatly appeal to our sense of fairness to the man wc @l~ at the head of the nation three years ago by the biggest majority in r~ent years, m'xi who we believe is being unjustly criticized beCause of ~n4Lttio~ over which he has no control. We were not an "original rooter" for Mr. Hoover four years ago and can pick a number of flaws in his administration because of things that db not appeal ,to us persortally, but on, the great broad question of his tr~g to aid farm sections, we believe he has made a greater effort and reLlly done more for agriculture than any president of recent years, and, of what others think, we believe in "giving the Devil .his due," ao we w~h our farmer friends would take the time to read this letter #rein Senator McCumber and think over the very fair prcser~tations he mak~ therein. The letter follows: Mr. Walter Cushing, ]~meh, North ~kota. My dear Mr. Cushing: While I am no longer personally carrying on in the political arena, end hence have not written you for a long time on, political lines, you Will know by this letter that I am still much conce#ned in what I believe to be the interest of ,the country and especially that of our State. which I vorfly believe, in some sections, by reason of crop failures and very low prlees, has been stricken worse than any other State in the Union. ,'"-Th~ year 1~2 is a Presidential campaign year. However, I shall not Write you from e, partisan standpoint. Tl3ore is an old homely saying, "Never swap horses in the middle of a a~/' If this bit of household philosopIw is pertinent under normal condi- Of ~ stream how much more pertinent when it is so swollen that your horse is valiantly swimming toward the farther ,~3mre of safety. We are today in the deepest and most difficult stream of depression We l~tve ever known. Under such conditions without pausing to contem- plate ¢~he cause, we are too prone to place the blame on some one who is not in the ~ightest degree responsl.ble for the condition, and often one whO, finding those conditions, has done everything possible to extricate Ua fr~a our serious situation. ~andl~ly, I do not think any President of the United Sta,tes, with the e~l~tion of ,President Lincoln, has had such an, adverse and distress- il~ ~t~'.m~ton thrust upon him as has been thrust upon President Hoover. And no President has ever met an internal crisis with greater courage and detemaination. He-bad scarcely ,more than entered upon his duties as Chief Execu- We When a storm that had for several years been gathering, burst upon c¢ot~try with a fury scarce known, For several years the wildest ex- tra'~,gance ever known in our history, or the history of any country so far as "I know, had seized upon our people. Senseless. speculative gam- bling ran riot. We seemed to have lost all sense of proportion. Stocks • . ~, T~tYRS~AY, MARCH 3, 1932 VALUES, NOT HOT AIR t f~T~¢'~- aa "-~-~'--" ' R. Allan Low, wife and young " l eI[ l u,hter arrived As an evidence that prices of[ .. ~ " week and are now settled in the commodities are not governed by~, ~ Healtli GO the north side• supply and demand, it is frequently] Mr. Low succeeds Herman Palm as noted that when the president, for l ". ~t,. ~ ~ '~ instance declares a new .policy (at-1 manager of the Buttrev store, and terlv unrelated to supply and de-, SPRING TONIC both he and his wife are delightful mand) that prices go up or down] people to know and will be made as the case may be to the taste of(ByDr. William J. Scholes) welcome in Beach. Mrs. Ole ~or- ~he stock and produce gamblers. It We are approaching the season son remains as Manager LOw s as- is difficult to see just what relation: whenmany feel the effects of the sistant. wheat, for instance, has to do with great annual epidemic of physical Mr. Palm leaves tgca~t for a a political proposition, but the bulls and mental languor commonly new store managership with a great and bears in the exchanges go to it known as "spring fever." deal of regret,, which is shared by as though the pronouncement was Whether this feeling of lassitude the many friends he has made dur- equal to the discovery of an emor- is a natural phenomenon of spring, ing the year or more he has been mous crop in some country, as we or whether it represents the aecu- Buttrev manager here. and regrets mulcted effects of somewhat an- that it is the policy of his firm to see in the reports every day. The mighty Cask to raise the price of agricultural products in the face of a sooner stock and all commodities ~urplus. in the face of the enormously increased taxes, in the face of a are bought and sold on their actual value the sooner wewill decreased per capita consumption and in face of a wide-spread depres- recover from the present unpleasantness. A ~on throughout the world. It was thought best to recommend to Con- crop of wheat should be sold on its ~res,s the creation of a Farm Board who were to study this complex actual milling value: the stock of any concern slmuld be sold on its problem, who were to arrange a vast system of cooperative handling of ability to produce dividends. When farm product~, and who were given a half billion dollars to carry on a we get around to that there will be • constructive program. He selected, after long conference with those a great deal more stability and con- fidence in stocks and products than mostdeeply interested, a Board to carry on this stupendous work. The no,,_, exists, and when a bank takes Presidept himself could, not personally conduct this work, and while some eitl~er as collateral it will not be taking a great gamble as to the of us think that this Board might have given greater consideration to value of that collateral when the the matter of organizing the whole farming public into cooperative agen- imper it represent~ comes due, and those owning either stock or eom- cies, placing themselves in a position where they could withhold at least moditv will have something of a ,tl~e cereal products from the market until better prices could have ob- known value to place in their state- rained, we must not forget that this Board, located in the Capital of the ment when asking banking and other financial accommodations. Nation in which arc also located heads of the great farm organizations, has had many conferences with them, and we must give them credit for having advised and done what seemed to them to be for the best inter- est of the farming public. The subject is so extensive, so complex, that there necessarily will be a very considerable divergence of opinion as to what should be the ,better program for uplifting the agricultural indus,try of the country. One important thhng this Board has been doing is the laying of a foun- dation upon which alone in rn~ opinion, must rest the structure of farm prosperity. The organization of the farming public into cooperative sell- mg agencies with power to withhold their products from .the market for a decent living price is the important remedy today. This Board is doing that work. and when completed it will solve, I believe, our agricultural difficulties. It will pu~ the farming public, acting as a Unit. in a position analogous to the Labor Unions of the country whereby they will have a voice in determining the selling price of their products. While this work is going on toward completion we should do nothing to check it but do everything to facilitate it. The next important step advocated by th? President was to withhold any .pressure upon the foreign countries owing us to collect our interest and installments and to thereby allow ,these debtor countries a breathing spell in which to strengthen their own industrial conditim~s and use the money which would come in.to our National coffers to purchase our Am- erican good~. He has suggested the moratorium which has been granted for one year and I for one sincerely hope will be repeated for at least ~mother year or so. He has done what every sensible creditor in the s.tricken counties of our own State should do. that no debts should be pressed until our farmer~ are better able to Day. And again, at the earnest suggestion of the President the great banking institutions of this country came to the aid of not only Germany to prevent her collapse, but also in support of Great Britain, to .the end that these, our princi,lyal customers of Europe. might sooner reach a con- ditions of such prosperity as would enable them to resume their old pur- chases from ~his country. And again, to widen the loaning ability of our farm loaning banks. About everything but the farm m taxed according to its oroductiv- itv or location, such as the better location and value of a town lot for business purposes. But the farm has a cast iron tax regardless of what it produces. There-should be a way found to tax it according to its production. Some day the people will be able to break the strangle-hold that our obsolete tax- ing system has on us and devise a method of raising money for gov- ernmen~ purposes that is fairer and more elastic than anything we have now. ,--o GOLVA Lorena tIurd. Iteporter EXCITING GAME By a ~core of 16 to 17 Baker Town team defeated Golva Friday even- int. The game was played in the Golva school gym before a large crowd. The game, one of the best of the season, was very exciting al- theu~h rou°~l~. The teams seemed to be evenly matched a~cl victory for either side was not certain un- til the whistle blew. The score at the end of the first half was 5 and 5. High point man for Golva was Bud Haigh. Bert Fasching. who has been at- tending barber school in Fargo this winter, returned home Wednesday evening. He was met at the train in Beach b~, Homer Madison. BANKER TSCHIDA HURT hygienic living, is difficult to say. change their managers from place It is more likely to be the latter• to place as occasion arrives. All Winter is the'season during which his'friends here will wish ~him the we spend much time indoors• We best kind of success and good luck are usually not exposed to an over- wherever he finally is located• abundance of fresh air. And we get as little outdoor exercise as at The Advance works for you. any time of the year. The person~ in ordinarily good health, however, [ -----: h ~ ~ -----:" suffers no loss of appetite. The us- ~ ! 10I ual tendency is to eat too much for I '$ ~S the amount of exercise that is being taken. '~" ~Fa SO it is not at all surprising that l I I1 ~eG living in this way for three or four l months is llkely to make one feel a]This community of Iowa Farmers little sluggish about the time that lwants to buy severa~ ~arloads of farm ehunks~harnes~"brok~e or hal- spring begins. , ter broP:e, ~e]~ll~gs~r ~rood mares. Old Methods Passe' of any color|fro]]~ fouP to twelve The old way of attemptingto years "old. I=I~w ~any have you for cure this va~ueailment was to sale and howI s~fn cound you ship? consume one-or more bottles of V~rri(e at onc~ ]g) I,'IgEI) ('HA~]~I,EII, CIIAlglTON, some so-called blood-purifier or v IOWA. ~pring tonic. And. ~erhaps, a spring tonic is in order. But this is usuall not one of the kind to be taken out of a bottle or in the form of pills. Of course, those who have deft- nite physical ailments may require some medicine in the course of treatment. Such people have more wrong with them than a siniple at- tack of spring lassitude. Fresh Air Best Tonic For those who have no disease. however, the best tonics are suit- able exercise, fresh air. and care to avoid overe~tting, When possi- ble, the exercise should be taken in the open air. This insures a plentiful supply of fresh air at the very time when the system has the most use for it. A short vacation spent largely in outdoor exercise of some kind would no.dou,bt, be an, ideal tonic. But as this is not always possible, a moder- ate daily dOSe of some form of ex- ercise in the onen air is the next best thing in the way of a spring tonic. (Conyright. 1932. by The Bonnet- Brown Corporation. Chicago.) Us Sel our We carry a complete stock Of TEXACO GAS AND OIL TexacFService Station GOODWIN THOMPSON Manager The first sign that a cow is be- colninff short of phosphorus is seen in the desire to chew bones. At a later stage the animal gnaws wood xemetimes destroyi~ managers and be×ca from which she is fed. La~er she become¢ stiff in the .joints. thin and unthrifty. of all kinds were sold and re-sold for ten times their inherent values, that our farmers can secure loans at a low rate of interest to tide them John Tschida, while getting a can of water at the town pump on l! that ia, v~lues based upon their normal earnings, over, he has advocated and secured legislation to tlmt end. Wc,,dnesday slipped and fell cutting II Nor was this limited to stocks. Alt.hough land prices had not been And again, to prevent further collapse of many of our great banks a ~,.'asl~ in his lip and loosening ~* I1 some of his teeth. He drove to ~'g~ Imm a0 badly inflated, lands had nevertheless been sold and re-sold for prices with their frozen assets he has brought into active assistance all the Beach where Dr. Bradley treated J v-- Ii : frO~ three to four times their earning values and mortgaged beyond other great banking institutions and has hereby saved mllions of people the cuts. Saturday, Hubert Schmitz ~ .~ W qlqU! l1 teok him to Dickinson for further II ~. And ¢o add to these dangerous speculations another worse col- from heavy loss. The banks of our State have been loaded more or less treatment as his [ace was badly ValTq~m~.--a~rs~_ae II ~ity W~ ~brewing,--the calamity of unrestrained Municipal, State, with frozen assets, with paper of farmers which otherwise under normal .~wollen and was no better. The ~v~,~ ~a~ • ~ [~ Maintains its high stan- ~nty, City and School District bonding, imposing a tax burden upon conditions would have ,been good. Those banks should take advantage of latest• ~.:repOrtoo iSreturnthat hehomeiS betterMrs ]l~aTl" women and enUdrea" find llll d~rd of good and plentiful and w 11 S n . • ' t~ people, which is today strangling the public and our industries as this relief measure, ~o~.~2 ~. ~, r~oe~.~. ,,,i*)~ ~im Kelp-O-](ira a ~afe and effie- I1 ' • , ,% . ~. ........ ~S ...................... ie~tt treatment for debiUty, |l meals at com:'ar.ting n~er before. And again, within a few days another wide reaching law will have - ' ' ~ a ~--------~lil~ vof.~rn lnss of vital powt rt~ and glan [1 l~gure~ corapiled by the Census Bureau show that d~ring the fifteen been enacted for the purpose of furnishing thecapital necessary for the from~'rmctPaFargo ...................... Sunday evening whereed dolor in, pairment. " . X'O[,* (:~N, " I1 pmces / . ~ars, from 1915 to 1930, the groas debt of the States increased 359 per- rehabilitation of our public industries and to put into circulation he had s|)ent the r)ast week. nt: ell) AT FORqP¥ @R II al~ this, as I Understand, does not include Cities, Towns, Counties billions of dollars now hidden away through, fear. Mr. and Mrs. George Randash l*ouN(; AT SliT]( Quit ~y- ll a,d son Billy of Carlyle were guestsI i..~ bet..re ~our z,.ne ~'ll.- II and ~hoot Districts. It is estimated that the .total public debt of the And again, to meet the unentployment situation he has l-fished to atm;..the Ed, ~, Fiscnerlub -irlsn°memet~UnaaYat t'he i ......... ,t. -;tin ~s a m:nerauzed" ltege-~- till Urttt~ States, Federal, State, County and other Munici, palities, is now at the limit of ot~r means a public building program and public construction ~e ~-n c ~ table envy and plea~ t to home of Ed. Fischer Tuesday af- , , I1 I~ f¢~'~y bfllio~ dollars. This means that every baby born this year in every possible line. ter s~chool. 12 members were pres-I take, not habit format. It l1 ~|nto the worlc~ with a $300.00 mortgage on its life. And yet again, to the end that' other Nations, not blessed with our cnt. After the business meeting ] i~ rleh i, Vitamine~and Or- I1 luncheon was served by Mrs. Fisch- I ganle Sails. Kelp-~-Vita is a II Now focus your min~l on the farm loans of North I~kota. Since themighty resources, could expend all their energies in the production of er which was heartily enjoyed by [ RI~]VIT~LIZEn, ~ REHAB- II ll~dAll~r~ of the World War our taxes have increased in some sections of articles of commerce, thereby increasing the real wealth of the world, he all'. rncmbe~s.~ _ r . . "-each __. [ |I, ITATOI~. a ~. ~'V~]~'~TOM |l 8~t~ fi~X) percent. It is needless to.go into .the increased bonds of has done everything in his power to bring about a substantial limitation visitorJ" ~" Sux~da.~a"e o~, afternoon. ~ ~ was a tJoiva [ aad ]N~.;~." {'O,~'l'(~It'lOIt -aad-*and n ]l Wflha M 1 HI/( ON~T U 1~1t It |n ~ and especially of counties to explain this situation. The th{ng we of armaments. Mr. and Mrs. " " m cManiga I ,] - .*: r~jll~Ivlc. It |, - |I~ m~t bear in mind, is that farm lands bear the far greater portAon of tax- Now as you read over these many efforts on the ,part of President and Mrs. Olaf Johnson were having I erea~c~ vlt~t~ and g|ve~ ~.,. |l dental work donc in Beach Wed-[Pe~. Vim ~i.d ¥i~ar. Ketp- |l e$ ~;o ~ Intere, st on our obligations. You cannot hide your land from Hoover, can you think of anything that he has left undone that would nesdav.- . . ..... ] O-](i~a i~ for Vitality the Ja~t |l atmeuOr, Lends are not taxed according to the income derived from tend to bring about normal conditions in this counry? Can you- think Mias Marcella ~'mneman wno nas ~ ..... ,~ been out of school the past week on wor. ~n modern aetenee, seao them, Your tax is not lessened one penny because era year, or several of a single thing that should have been done which he, so far as his account of sickness in the family ttbi" adv. w~m ,a,r ,mmc, ,~l- I1 dre~sand lOein~tamps or y~r$. of crop ~ailure. power goes, has not already anticipated, and put into effect? is now back in her old place. ] . |l WHEN IN TOWN GET Wehave had a greater surplus of our cereal crop in the Umted ~tates All of these forces which, through the President's energetic sugges- I coin for one week's sample |l al~ yet under normal conditions have received a fair price for those tion, have been put into motion must in time bring about the desired re- SUNSHINE MEETING I treatment. Addre~ 1,~elp-O- II YOUR LUNCH OR DIN- The Sunshine society met with [ vita Laboratories, 1046 Venice I1 NER THERE AND BE Wh~t then is the cause or the many causes which have brought salt. Is it safe, is it good policy to change Leadership in. this critical Mrs. Wallace Page. in Golva last [ Bled. , Lea Angeles, Calif., I1 a~ ~ worst depression in grain ~prices we have ever known? stage when the farther shore is within view? Wednesday. ana a nice crowd at- ] Dept N D-3 I1 IL~PPY. ~r. knOW llfe's first demand ks for food; and when you have not the I do not know, of course, what a change of Administration would ied~{y MVid'~nrn:~en~r'~" ~SZ"--~ -- ~~ i-- mt 40 purc~ food you must produce it. That is exactly what hap- bring about. I do know that there has not been one single suggestion rietta "Shoen, Mr. and Mrs. ~ r~ all through Europe when the World War closed. Every acre offrom opponents that would propose a single step other than that which Tschida and Miss Florencj~,~am- [ ~ ~ has already been taken by the President to meet our depressing situa- eron. After dinncr a ~{~hington t/] [I at" yea,oureVerYEuropeanSqUaremarketsyard capa~01ewere lost°f cultivatlonto us. to cereals, and to that tion. I do not know that the ?pposing political party would follow outual0r°grambu~inesa~ten~next iwa enjoved~f~d the us- ~}) ......... A GOOD PIECE }~\~ again, it is reported, and I presume accurately, that the ,per cap- their theory tha~ a protective ~ariff upon wheat, .for instance, is of no meeting will be ~ar~eks at ] |( T0 TARRY / [~ =ion of wheat flour in the United, Sates has fallen about value whatever,--a mere sop to our .farmers, as is often expressed, and th. home/ M~Andr~) _ A .... ]':'"~ /i Miss Cec~li~¢Mi ll er has bee, n hay- [~ ~-- ~[r.~] --. ~ reduce our present tariff on wheat and other farm cereals. Those who ing seige ~'~~i¢,[)) ~o|~n ~|le¥ /] :utSinCeourPre'WarpresenttimeS'surplus.N°w that 20 percent would far more ihave given the subject real consideration know that in times of a small hut has ke~ at her school work. [[( iw~ ./a ~ ~ ~tin, during this period of excessive spending of money surplus, and in times when there is no surplus of Spring wheat this pro- Miss Edna Peterson who has been [ I~ |l~ff~l I] the whole United States, money represented by these vast tection, now amount.~ng to 42 cents per bushel, will be of wonderful value visiting in Golva returned home on ~[ ]aa~.~...a (( our manufacturers were able to dispose of their products to to the wheat industry. . Monday. _ t~\ ~ ByACH \~ , , ~ who is in Michigan attending school |( Moderl~/--- Comfortabl~. (~ af the country at good profits; but as soon as 4here followed ~ You will recall ~that in 1909 or 1910 ~e had a shortage of the Sprino The friends of Ro:¢ ~osserman. II I / /$ the agricultural industries of the country which crippIed ~hea~ crop, that ~!laracter of wheat which goe~ into our higher grade of are hoping for his speedv recovery. ~ ........ "~ ........... )| a~pendicitis and is now getting [= --- ..... ~ r of one-third of our population, the result showed flour, and we received in Minneapolis and Duluth aprice for our hard Roy was recentlv operated on for q/ {( production of manufactured products and the con- Spring wheat on about a level with the Liverpool pric... And when these along nicely - - -- - ~ -- --- "~.J Mr, and" Mrs. Charles Anthony of millions of workmen. program carried on throughout the country for more at an enormously high cost began at the same time to re- ~u~ it had been overdone, and threw out of employment hun- thousands of other workmen. farm organizations, which are now being organized by the Farm Board. and family were dinner guests at reach a stage in which they can withhold their products from the mar- the home of Gtty Curl Sunday. Dr. Bradley of Beach was a caller ket for living ,prmes, then our forty odd cents per bushel protection will be necded to support such prices. Taking all of these matters into consideration, ought we no~ to do whatever ks in our power to support the President in his endeavors and to continue his policies? As things look to me today, and without a single element,, of partisan~ politics affecting my judgmel~t, I feel that we should do whatever we can do to re-nomitmte President Hoover. I cannot but feel that it is bad policy to "swap horses in the middle of a stream." Very sincerely yours, P, J, M'CUMBER. at the Lyman Page home Sunday. Guy Curl returned from Iowa on Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. W. W. Pa~;e visited over- night at the Lyman Page home on S~d~'~{d""'~ ~" Mrs. Claude Schouboe were Beach visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Tscbida and Miss Wilma Kremers, on their trip to Fargo called on Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Lee of McKenzie. Mr. Lee was principal of the Golva school last year. the devastating World War has practically bankrupt all 1 pre-war customers, and those countries which during War, and for some time thereafter, out of their borrowings were tO purchase enormously from the United States, thus adding &o our gold atlpply, now find themselves unable to pay even the interest on ~he~ bonded indebtedness--thus a~aln vastly diminishing our export : I l~tve mentioned these few of the prime catmes of the present de- Mrs. Gugolz was a Golva visitor Wednesday• . . . we may clearly understand that it has not been a situation There is crying need of a shift of Investigations into the service Su~t. Wentlanci was giving Achievement tests in the Golva abOUt by any political agency, but-as an after result of a World taxation from real property to some life of farm machinery show that school Mondav to the Intermediat~ hteat al0eculations and enormously increased taxation, other items, and anything that. will few machines really wear out. Most t~ beck over these causes, let us candidly ask ourselves: Was bring this about will prove a boon. equipment is discarded as a result grades. That is one reason why so manyof poor care, lack of repair or be- Mr. and Mrs. Phillil~ Page were visitors in Sentinel Butte Friday. .t l~0over respon~ble for the World War? Was he responsible anorove the proposed four-cent gas cause i~ ,becomes out of date. An ill wind that blows no good dire condition of our European customers at the close of that tax, which makes those who use the blew Monday and in the evening roads the most pay for them and at No piece of ground on the farm I when it rained, thunder and lightn- [ ~'as l~e responsible for the foot that these old customers could the same time give the counties a can compare with the garden as a I ing accompanied it. This is very j ~r purchase ~s previously our agricultural and other products? chance to reduce their levies for source of profitable returns. One-I unusual weather for North Dakota/ road purposes because of the eoun- half acre may easily produce $1501 responsible for the increase of food production throughout Eu- ties share of that tax. That is the worth of food. in February. "~ i the consequent decrease in .the demand for American food 0re- reasoh the state C?u~ty Commie- John Schaefer went to Dickinson I Tuesday morning for medical aid. Is he In any way responsible for the fact that the consumption signers assocmtion myers this tax. One of the first steps in reducing j Mr. and Mrs. A1. Hoverson and / 1~ the United States has diminished 20 percen:b ,per cupitit " costs is the ~ planting of, family were Sunday guests at theI and the only certalnl Theodore Maanum home. - I l Father Lack was a Dickinson vis- ] l W ~r, and the conSequent surplus ol seed is to Itor Monday. ] the excessive borrowings o~ States Mr. and Mrs. George Fischer and daughter Margaret were dinner o guests at the George Raisl~ ho~e ! on Sunday. HAVE Y O U R WATCHES AND CLOCKS REPAIRlsD BEFORE SPRING WORK BEGINS. Would be much sur- prised if bearings in your autontobl burnt out after the motor td, run for over a year ,without changing oil? Yet some of the mechanism in your watch runs at the rate of 108,000 strokes a day and never stops for a r~t. It pays to b~ave your Watch cleaned and oiled at least once a year. WHAT many tion very acid in the stor txerves have b~, and food sours. alkali, which n~ flizes instantly. And t| ~st alkali to medical scie/~ is Phil[ip Magnesia. One spoonful of this hs tasteless alkali in water neu instantly many times that acid, and the symptoms at once. You will never methods when once efficiency of this. bottle to try. Be sure to ge Milk of Mag physicians for cess acids..Y2 tOre.